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A Social Networking Approach to the Legal Learning Track
TREC 2011
, Legal Learning Track
Legal Track, Tuesday November 15, 15:45-16:00
Plenary, Thursday November 17, 10:00-10:30


Abstract:

This presentation reports on the University of Waterloo experience with the Legal Learning track where three different methods were used to approach the retrieval task.  Two are based on previously used methods and the last is a novel method based on modifying the responsiveness probability using social network analysis.

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Do a billion documents change the First World War?
Wednesday, March 30th, 2011, 19:00-21:00
Waterloo Stratford Campus Digital Media Series
Presented by Rob Warren and Shelley Hulan

Abstract:

The First World War has come alive for later generations via their close reading of individual works on the war. But this war was the first lengthy international conflict to keep records on hundreds of thousands of displaced people and military personnel as they moved all around the globe, and the documents generated by them provide a rich source of insight into the times, and in the wake of the large-scale digitization of paper-based data from pre-digital periods, First World War records have the potential to touch readers anew.
Where soldiers' journals and longer accounts bring the conflict to light in a very personal way, the digitization of millions of forms and official documents concerning the "war to end all wars" allows for the detection of global patterns of migration, communication, and disease previously impossible to find using manual research methods. Mining Great War data might be feared to rob the war of its power to illuminate the costs of modern conflict, a power that has historically lain in the personal tragedies and triumphs identified with it and the revelations they offer about human suffering and human potential, not the more anonymous and repetitive information on official forms. In a discussion of the patterns and trends detectable by analyzing millions of data mine-able Red Cross files, however, we will suggest that data mining both significantly alters our understanding of the war and yet continues to move us in surprising ways.



Paper at MEM2010: Canopener: Recycling Old and New Data

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WWW2010.pngCanopener: Recycling Old and New Data
MEM2010, Monday, April 26th, 2010, 11:00am-11:30am
Presented by Cosmin Basca




Abstract:

The advent of social markup languages and lightweight public data access methods has created an opportunity to share the social, documentary and system information locked in most servers as a mashup.  Whereas solutions already exists for creating and managing mashups from network sources, we propose here a mashup framework whose primary information sources are the applications and user files of a server.  This enables us to use server legacy data sources that are already maintained as part of basic administration to semantically link user documents and accounts using social web constructs.

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